Lulemino

Lulemino ( German Lüllemin ) is a village in the powiat Słupski the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship.

Geographical location

Lulemino located in Pomerania, about eleven kilometers south of Kobylnica ( Kublitz ), three kilometers south of Slupsk ( Stolp ) and 106 kilometers west of the regional capital Gdańsk ( Gdańsk).

History

Today's Lulemino was a noble estate. Historic village of shape after it is a line village. It is said to have once been in the possession of a Kashubian landlord (Pan). Later, the village became a property of the town of Stolp. This ratio was owned in 1494 by Duke Bogislaw X in a made ​​out to Wolgast verdict. Since the Kashubian term for Mr. Pan is a part of the former manor was later called Pankenhof. Around 1784, there was a Lüllemin Vorwerk, a water mill, seven farmers, two Kossäten, a Büdner, a schoolmaster, and the small peat bog away from the village center with a skating total of 21 households. In the mill pond fish farming was operated. 1925 were in Lüllemin 51 residential buildings. 1939 lived in Lüllemin 313 people in 69 households.

Before the end of World War II Lüllemin belonged to the district of Stolp in the administrative region of Pomerania Pomerania. The municipal area was 925 hectares and home to a total of two residences

  • Lüllemin
  • Lot

Lüllemin was the seat of the administrative district Lüllemim. In 1939 there were in the church Lüllemin 26 farms.

Towards the end of the Second World War, the region was occupied on 7 May 1945 by the Red Army. Soon after, the village was put together with all Pomerania under Polish administration. In the summer of 1945, the immigration of Poles who took over houses and farms began. This was accompanied by the first expulsions of indigenous villagers. Lüllemin was renamed by the Poles in Lulemino.

Later on in the Federal Republic of Germany identified 160 and in the GDR 56 expelled from Lüllemin villagers.

In 2008 Lulemino had 106 inhabitants.

References

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